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Astro Pages14-18 Chapter 2-2 THE SKY AND ITS MOTION

The Sky and Its Motion

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The Sky and Its Motion. Astro Pages14-18 Chapter 2-2. In order to learn how to understand the sky, we are required to see it from the perspective of the original astronomers 1000’s of years ago. The Celestial Sphere. - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

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Page 1: The Sky and Its Motion

Astro Pages14-18

Chapter 2-2

THE SKY AND ITS MOTION

Page 3: The Sky and Its Motion

THE CELESTIAL SPHERE

• Ancient astronomers believed the Earth was surrounded by a great sphere (the sky), with the stars stuck on the inside (like thumbtacks in the ceiling).

• We now know the stars are great distances away, not all the same distance from Earth.

Page 5: The Sky and Its Motion

• Celestial Sphere – an imaginary sphere of very large radius surrounding Earth, to which the planets, stars, sun, and moon seem to be attached.

• Scientific Model – a concept that helps you think about some aspects of nature without necessarily being true.

Page 7: The Sky and Its Motion

• The celestial sphere model is a useful tool to use when discussing what we see from Earth’s perspective.

• It gives us a framework, but is based on assumptions that we know to be false.

Page 9: The Sky and Its Motion

1. Sky objects appear to rotate westward around the Earth each day, due to the eastward rotation of Earth.

This rotation produces day and night as the

Earth rotates on its axis.At any time you only see ½ the celestial

sphere, that is the part above the horizon.

Page 11: The Sky and Its Motion

VOCABULARY

• Horizon – circular boundary between Earth and sky

• Zenith – the point in the sky directly above the observer

• Nadir – the point on the celestial sphere directly below the observer (opposite the zenith)

Page 13: The Sky and Its Motion

VOCABULARY

• Celestial North and South Poles – points in the sky directly above the Earth’s geographical North and South Poles.

• Celestial Equator – the imaginary line around the sky directly above Earth’s equator

Page 15: The Sky and Its Motion

2. What you see in the sky depends on your

location (latitude) on Earth.

Northern vs. Southern hemisphere

Your zenith moves as you move, and it

may correspond to other points

depending on your location.

Page 17: The Sky and Its Motion

3. Astronomers measure distances across the sky in degrees and parts of degrees (minutes and seconds).Circumpolar constellations never set because

they rotate around the celestial pole, never dipping below the horizon

Still this too is based on your latitude as to how many constellations there would be

At equator there are no constellations that never set, and the number increases as you go toward the poles

Page 20: The Sky and Its Motion

• The astronomer Hipparchus first noticed the Earth’s axis had changed direction, by comparing his findings on locations of stars to their noted locations 200 years previous.

• He realized that the rotational poles and equator were slowly moving relative to the stars.

Page 21: The Sky and Its Motion

• Like a spinning top, as the toy spins its axis sweeps in circles.

• The Earth behaves in the same manner as it spins once each day, and would theoretically make one “sweep” around the circle in about 26,000 years.

Page 24: The Sky and Its Motion

• For example, the precession of the Earth has changed our “pole star” through recorded history.

4800 years ago, the Egyptians noted the

pole star was Thuban, in the constellation Draco.

Currently our pole star is Polaris, in the

constellation Ursa Minor.

In about 12,000 years, our pole star will

theoretically be Vega, in the constellation Lyra